Re-welding a knee lever on a shobud in Austin, TX?
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Re-welding a knee lever on a shobud in Austin, TX?
My LKR or F# to G knee lever managed to come un-welded from the 'shaft' or 'barrel' that makes the change. Anyone know of someone in Austin that could re-weld it for me? I'm not any good with aluminum welding...the picture below will hopefully answer any questions. Thank you!
- Tom Wolverton
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I'm thinking 3 options here:
1. Cheapo option: try JB weld or Devcon 2-ton epoxy
2. Find a welder that can do small parts. Maybe a brass musical instrument repair guy.
3. Replace the assembly with one from James Morehead or Michael Yahl. If you get a longer shaft, you can place that LKR lever further to the rear of the guitar, which is usually more comfortable (unless you have really long legs).
Good luck. That guitar looks like a nice, clean R&B ShoBud.
1. Cheapo option: try JB weld or Devcon 2-ton epoxy
2. Find a welder that can do small parts. Maybe a brass musical instrument repair guy.
3. Replace the assembly with one from James Morehead or Michael Yahl. If you get a longer shaft, you can place that LKR lever further to the rear of the guitar, which is usually more comfortable (unless you have really long legs).
Good luck. That guitar looks like a nice, clean R&B ShoBud.
To write with a broken pencil is pointless.
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I don't think you need be concerned about aluminum welding,
as it looks as though the piece to which the actual knee lever
broke loose from the round shaft, both of which are steel.
Remove that piece from the lever and remove the shaft from the cabinet.
Chances are, the 'break' in the old weld will show the way they were
'positioned together' for the welder to re-weld the joint, if not, bring
the cabinet to the welder and show him how they're to be positioned.
~Russ
as it looks as though the piece to which the actual knee lever
broke loose from the round shaft, both of which are steel.
Remove that piece from the lever and remove the shaft from the cabinet.
Chances are, the 'break' in the old weld will show the way they were
'positioned together' for the welder to re-weld the joint, if not, bring
the cabinet to the welder and show him how they're to be positioned.
~Russ
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- Malcolm McMaster
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Ricky Davis lives around Austin area (I think) , being a super rebuilder of Buds ,should be able to help you.
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- Ricky Davis
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I don't have welding equipment.
I've used JB weld in the past for the original parts and has worked mighty fine. This is a newly made part and takes a different weld...like silver solder weld type stuff...I would take it down to the local machine shop and say "hey dude; weld me up real quick and I'll buy ya a beer for lunch".
Ricky
I've used JB weld in the past for the original parts and has worked mighty fine. This is a newly made part and takes a different weld...like silver solder weld type stuff...I would take it down to the local machine shop and say "hey dude; weld me up real quick and I'll buy ya a beer for lunch".
Ricky
Ricky Davis
Email Ricky: sshawaiian2362@gmail.com
Email Ricky: sshawaiian2362@gmail.com
- Ricky Davis
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I don't have welding equipment.
I've used JB weld in the past for the original parts and has worked mighty fine. This is a newly made part and takes a different weld...like silver solder weld type stuff...I would take it down to the local machine shop and say "hey dude; weld me up real quick and I'll buy ya a beer for lunch".
Ricky
I've used JB weld in the past for the original parts and has worked mighty fine. This is a newly made part and takes a different weld...like silver solder weld type stuff...I would take it down to the local machine shop and say "hey dude; weld me up real quick and I'll buy ya a beer for lunch".
Ricky
Ricky Davis
Email Ricky: sshawaiian2362@gmail.com
Email Ricky: sshawaiian2362@gmail.com
- Jerry Jones
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- Jerry Jones
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No alum. welding needed. Lever is bolted on to a inch and 1/4 metal strap with a 5/16" hole in it. Anyone with a $89 Harbor Freight welder could easily do it. Even me. Weld around the outside as Jerry stated. RP
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I'd like to ad, bringing "just" this part to a welder
will be very hard to do. You would need to pull all the pull rods that go through that rack, take off the complete puller assembly and either bring the whole assembly to the welder, or grind off the rivet that connects the linkage to the rack and then you have to re-rivet it back together. If it were me, I'd cover the whole bottom of the guitar with alum. foil to protect it from sparks, allowing just the area to be welded uncovered, and bring the whole inverted guitar to the welder. Don't bother trying JB weld at this joint. It will break the first time you try it. Good luck. RP
PS..I don't think Michael Yahl makes this bracket.
will be very hard to do. You would need to pull all the pull rods that go through that rack, take off the complete puller assembly and either bring the whole assembly to the welder, or grind off the rivet that connects the linkage to the rack and then you have to re-rivet it back together. If it were me, I'd cover the whole bottom of the guitar with alum. foil to protect it from sparks, allowing just the area to be welded uncovered, and bring the whole inverted guitar to the welder. Don't bother trying JB weld at this joint. It will break the first time you try it. Good luck. RP
PS..I don't think Michael Yahl makes this bracket.
Emmons SKH Le Grande, '73 P/J bass, Tick tack bass, Regal high strung, and a Coral Sitar, USA Nashville 112.
- James Morehead
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Tony, I've been waiting for you to email me a picture so I can just send you one. Now I know what you need, so send me your address. Problem solved, my friend!
"Good judgement comes from experience, and a lot of that comes from bad judgement"~old cowboy proverb.
shobud@windstream.net
shobud@windstream.net
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Rewelding a knee lever on a Sho-Bud in Austin Texas
It looks like the knee lever just has a hole in the bracket the lever attaches to. A simple weld the rod inside the hole from the outside. Any good machine shop welder should be able to do it. Mark the top dead center on the shaft looking down on it, so you will have an alignment point if the broken weld does not line up to make it fit correct. Looks like there is not enough shaft length to drill a hole in. Don't try any epoxy or glue the thing. It may not take the stress. Then a welder will have to get the parts clean of epoxy before he can do a proper weld. When I worked as a welder, bring it to me first. I did not want to clean up someone else mess. Good Luck in getting it fixed.
- Ken Metcalf
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- James Morehead
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Tony just needs to let me send him another. That part was from an era where these were "silver soldered". We have gone to arc welding them since, which is much more robust. That part is guaranteed, so will not cost Tony anything, and he will see this when he gets a chance to get back on the forum.
It's nice for ya'll to offer to weld it, but you can't finish it, and it will just begin to rust. Mine are plated to prevent that. It's as simple as it gets to just swap it out. Let a new one show up in the mail box.
It's nice for ya'll to offer to weld it, but you can't finish it, and it will just begin to rust. Mine are plated to prevent that. It's as simple as it gets to just swap it out. Let a new one show up in the mail box.
"Good judgement comes from experience, and a lot of that comes from bad judgement"~old cowboy proverb.
shobud@windstream.net
shobud@windstream.net
- Tom Wolverton
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